Microsoft's IE7 Ignores Windows Setting

You'll be seeing Microsoft's ClearType font rendering technology in Internet Explorer 7, even if you deliberately turned it off in Windows. It's a feature that users didn't know they needed, says Microsoft.

Microsoft is defending its decision to turn on its ClearType font rendering technology in Internet Explorer 7 even if users have switched it off system-wide.

ClearType, which debuted with Windows XP, is designed to make text more readable on LCD screens. By default, it's disabled in Windows, but Microsoft's IE 7 team has decided to enable it for the browser, even if the user has not turned on the feature Windows-wide.

"The decision to turn ClearType on by default in IE is unusual," acknowledged Bill Hill, a Microsoft researcher, in a posting to the IE team's blog. "But [it] was made because solid research over the past few years has shown conclusively that it improves reading, the task at which IE users spend most of their time."

Hill cited studies that claimed ClearType improved word recognition, reading speed, and reading comprehension, and defended the decision to enable ClearType by saying that users didn't know how to turn it on themselves.

"It certainly is unusual that IE is not respecting the system ClearType setting, but the problem is that most users do not know about features that are not turned on by default," Hill said. "We've found that a large percentage of Windows XP users don't know about ClearType, or how to turn it on.

"We believe the benefit of a 5 percent reading speed improvement offsets the minor annoyance for the few users that don't like ClearType."

Users commenting on Hill's blog generally took Microsoft to task for the decision.

"Can you imagine what would happen if every program started maintaining their own set of ClearType and other effects settings instead of using the system supplied values?" wrote a user identified as "matt."

"Frankly, IE 7 should follow the system wide setting and leave it at that," added "Xepol." "You want people to know about ClearType, find another venue to push it."

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